How Figment works.
Your kid makes real things with AI, and gets sharper doing it. Here's the whole idea, start to finish.
The worry
Screens worry you. They should.
Most apps made for kids are built to keep them watching. The longer they hold a kid, the better they score. So your kid finishes an hour and feels a little duller, not sharper. That's the worry, and it's a fair one.
The reframe
Figment is the other kind of screen.
An hour here leaves your kid sharper than it found them. They're not watching something. They're making something. And they walk away with one thing they built and one thing they learned.
What it is
Kids make real things with AI.
Storybooks. Comic strips. Songs. Characters. Trivia games. Your kid picks what to make, and Figment's tools help them make it. Every session ends with something they built, not something they scrolled past.

How it works
Three steps, every time.
- 1. Pick a template. Storybook, comic, song, character, or game. Your kid chooses what to make.
- 2. Make it with curated AI tools. Your kid writes the idea, the tools draft a few versions, and your kid keeps the one they like best. They're the author from start to finish.
- 3. Learn how AI thinks. Along the way, Figment explains a little of how AI works, in plain words a 10 year old gets. It's the AI4K12 ideas, taught simply.
Safe by design
Safe by design, not by promise.
There's no open chatbot on Figment. Every image is checked before your kid sees it. You see everything they make. And we built for COPPA from day one, not as an afterthought. The robots and characters your kid makes are things they create, never someone to chat with.
Opening soon
Figment opens July 13, 2026.
See what your kid could be making this summer. Founding families get our first prices, locked in.




